Abstract Lower Miocene silicified woods from south-east Coates Bay, Hukatere Peninsula, Kaipara Harbour, northern New Zealand, were studied using thin sections and scanning electron microscope micrographs. Woods resembling , Nothofagus, Leptospermum, Vitex, Quintinia, Eucalyptus, Dacrydium, and other gymnosperms are described. Pyroclastic flows carried woods from a podocarp-broadleaved forest to mix with Avicennia (mangrove) growing in estuarine conditions close to the site of preservation. The wood was probably alive or recently dead when overwhelmed by a pyroclastic flow. Fossil termite faecal pellets are recorded from borings in Avicennia sp. The hexagonal silicified pellets are similar to those formed by the extant New Zealand dry wood termite Kalotermes brouni. Four other types of borings in the wood and traces of fungal breakdown are described.
Keywords Miocene; petrified wood; silicification; Kaipara Harbour; New Zealand; wood anatomy; paleobotany; Avicennia; Nothofagus; Leptospermum; Vitex; Quintinia; Eucalyptus; Dacrydium; mangrove; beech; gymnosperm; angiosperm; termite; Kalotermitidae; insect borings; trace fossils; coprolites; faecal pellets; frass; fungi
R02040 Received 6 September 2002; accepted 16 January 2003; published
30 April 2003
© Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand, Volume 33, Number
1, March 2003, pp 395-414
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